Does your Twitter biography explain what you Tweet about? You’ve only got 160 characters to capture people’s interest. Why not check your bio now? Tell us about the changes you’ve made using the #AncestryHour tag.
Of course, the problem with scheduling Tweets in advance is that you need to be able to tell the difference between - eg - 16:55 and 18:55 hrs. Oh well, it’s gone now, so looking forward to your replies.
Doing a quick test to see what happens if I say "@threadreaderapp unroll." I might want to use this handy feature for something else next week.
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Since September 2021, I've been busy photographing, transcribing, and documenting the gravestones at my local churchyard, St Nicholas, Sutton Parish, Surrey (now Greater London). 👉 Here's a thread about 15 months spent in a #graveyard. [1/25] #AncestryHour
This entire project started as an excuse to get outside and get some exercise. “Why not photograph a few gravestones and add them to @FindaGrave?” I said... [2/25] #AncestryHour
Yeah, right. Like an enthusiastic #genealogist is just going to take a few gravestone photos. Absolutely NO chance that it might lead to a compulsion to photograph EVERY. SINGLE. GRAVESTONE. I mean, AS. IF. [3/25] #AncestryHour
I’ve spent hours researching my #FamilyHistory, but don’t have anyone to leave it too. #WikiTree provides a place to record information for others to read and critique (now and in the future). #AncestryHour [2/17]
I won’t be around for ever, so I need somewhere that my #FamilyHistory research will survive long after I’ve gone. #WikiTree provides that. It’s free, so no need to worry about subscription fees when I’m not around to pay them. #AncestryHour [3/17]
I’ve spent hours researching my #FamilyHistory, but don’t have anyone to leave it too. #WikiTree provides a place to record information for others to read and critique (now and in the future). #AncestryHour [2/17]
I won’t be around for ever, so I need somewhere that my #FamilyHistory research will survive long after I’ve gone. #WikiTree provides that. It’s free, so no need to worry about subscription fees when I’m not around to pay them. #AncestryHour [3/17]
Reply from a @FindaGrave volunteer: “Not accurate - Their data conflicts with my data". OK, so the two contemporary newspaper reports about the deceased‘s fatal road accident giving the correct year of death that I sent ya not good enough, huh? findagrave.com/memorial/21448…
In the interests of providing visitors to his @FindaGrave page with the *correct* information about John Smith Shireffs (1900-1955), I've added a picture of the press cuttings with dates, which just happen to match his entry in the statutory Register of Deaths. Images: @BNArchive
There is a John Ellis F Sherriffs, who died in Forfar in 1949, but John Smith Shirreffs who died in the road accident at Stirling and was buried at the Campsie-Lennoxtown Cemetery died in 1955.
Yesterday I posted official extracts of my birth and adoption records to @HighlandCouncil with the hope that the burial lairs of my birth mother, grandparents and great grandparents in #Gairloch’s New Cemetery can be assigned to me, the only living descendant. [1/3]
The graves concerned are the middle and right-hand ones in the photo above. I want to have the graves cleaned & the lettering re-done. When the time comes, I may join them there, as there is still space. [2/3]
More people to whom I am related are buried in this cemetery than anywhere else on earth, with more distant ancestors and relatives buried in the adjacent Old Burial Ground. [3/3]
Researching a C19th branch of my direct line from New Pitsligo in Aberdeenshire, who seem to have been extremely poor souls. Quite a few premature deaths from communicable diseases (mostly TB + 1xtyphoid). Very different to most of my middling (and usually long-living) relatives.
None of my ancestors made it above the level of tenant farmer, apart from the ones who owned a small cargo ship, but is a rather sad to think about the hard-up lot in New Pitsligo. Impression is they seem to have been close, and looked after each other with what little they had.
Oh dear. Looking across the 1861, ‘71 & ‘81 censuses, one of my 3x gt aunts in New Pitsligo may have had 7 illegitimate children (all with different surnames) before she married a man 13 years her junior. That’s going to take some working out...